Our family-run, veteran-owned safe and vault door business operates in middle Tennessee near Nashville and serves Tennessee, and the surrounding states. We also ship nationwide! If you're in the market for a GUN SAFE, VAULT DOOR, STORM SHELTER, RESIDENTIAL OR COMMERCIAL SAFE, we can help you find the safe that best fits your needs and budget. Gun safe? Safe Delivery? We can help!
Some of our brands include: ISM, GRAFFUNDER, AMSEC/ AMERICAN SECURITY, RHINO METALS, FIREKING, HAYMAN, GARDALL
We offer DISCREET safe moving and installation services on our safes and others.
If you're in the market for a quality gun safe, commercial safe, vault door, or about anything in the world of safes, give us a call! We sell some of the best gun safes and vault doors on the market today at very fair prices
Is there any way to tighten the pull handle? The bottom of mine is loose or jiggles a lil bit. Not bad or noticeable but wondering since it looks like they're installed at the factory am I'm SOL
@@derrickperez713 if you have an American built American Security, then yes. If you look at the handle, there are two black plastic looking caps- one on the top of the handle and one on the bottom -if you carefully remove those caps that are more like stickers, I believe you’ll find, a hex head bolt. Just tighten that up with an Allen wrench and put the little sticker back on.
@@peteburns6208 Graffunder and all of the U.S. built American Security gun safes do. There are other manufacturers that have models with plate steel doors, but you have to do your homework to make sure you’re getting one. Most safes nowadays have what we call a composite door which is made to look thick, but there’s really not much steel in it at all. It’s usually hollow with their fire lining inside which is usually sheetrock.
All you've really got to do is buy a cheap safe and repaint the door with those big ass letters Graffunder and the thieves will just go home and watch football.
from what I can tell online.. Inkas is tier 1 stuff... their most recent youtube "shorts" videos showing 2 or 4 vaults INSIDE the larger safe is crazy awesome... must cost a fortune
Would love to know if these "safes" were bolted down. Most of the pry videos are of safes laying flat on their back in an open space with long bars and lots of leverage. Bolted down, in a small space I would think cutting or drilling would be easier than prying in, even with these safes, but I am no expert.
Now thats a respectable safe, and I'm impressed with that door thickness. Does it have the same plate steel on the body, and also, what is the thickness of the steel that the bolts protrude from ?
Wow! I do welding and fabrication, and that door gap is absolutely amazing. I can't even guess as to how they achieve that with a 1" thick door! Thanks for sharing.
Since this safe sits above a crawl space, its best to reinforce that safe where the 4x4s are at with a high psi concrete embedded with steel meshings at the crawlspace in a box formation for added strength. I would do this for a powerful safe having at least 1/2 plate steel on all 6 sides, storing over $100K of valuables. I like the idea with the 4x4s wood, that way you can happen some 6 inch nails all around the 4x4 if the 4x4s are standing vertically, and as the concrete curse around the 4x4 with the nails, it will add more of a foundation that only an excavator can tackle it.
@@ShowemRight The 4 x 4‘s are not vertical. They’re flat underneath the plywood. This way there’s no exposed anchors for a bad guy to cut. Going to all the work with the concrete and mesh and all that would be extreme overkill for most applications as the weakest point is always the weakest point.
@@parkerssafesexactly what I was thinking it would just be faster to go through the door at this point what you did is way more than adequate especially adding the 2x4's underneath it'll definitely be more then enough to prevent a smash and grab or a few guys from flipping it on side to get better leverage when performing a prying attack... The only time you would secure more then this is with a high security TL-15 or greater U.L rated safe which would weigh 6 times more than a flimsy gun safe and presumably it would be already sitting on concrete.
I started with a decent small safe in 2004 but after my collection grew, I did a lot of research on multiple brands of gun safes and finally settled on an American Security BF 6636 due in fact to the thick half inch plate steel door and dual steel walls on the body and lastly the superior poured fire cladding instead of sheetrock. My criteria were for burglary protection first and foremost. One thing that I caught on to early in the search was the fact that most gun safes that used composite doors would never really let you know just how much steel was in the door. That's a nonstarter Browning and Liberty.
Casually moving a $26,000 safe. Unfortunately, with this administration I don't have any thing valuable enough to put in a Graffunder except my Kids. Having a Hollon RG-39 delivered tomorrow was just wondering how I could get it up the garage lip to store for a day until I pay a safe moving crew to come move it into place. Thanks for the video this is what makes youtube so awesome.
Door can't be all that heavy if you are moving it standing up real vault doors are moved on their back true weight starting at 4000 lbs and up retired vault man
Lights? That’s what’s important to you? It has lights but they don’t make it more secure or add to the fire rating. There, now big chief say, “Has lights I buy.”
They stand out a bit, can't really think of a place a skyblue(maybe Blue Origin?) or purple safe would match the esthetic. Green maybe, would be nice if it was a bit darker.
What are opinions like again? Never mind. I just remembered. Meilink is a decent safe though and not too unlike these BFX models. Both have a concrete type lining but these have a thicker plate door than the Meilinks that I have in stock. Thanks.
@@parkerssafeshahaha …. That dude has to have a serious superiority complex to call American Security trash Kinda reminds me of the guys who comment on a video of a quality 1200lb safe, but trashing it and saying that their safe door by itself is 1200lb….. So many cool guys out there!
When it comes to safes/vaults videos you do an excellent job.....the best I've seen overall. I appreciate your time and efforts. Starting my safe buying journey i have many questions, like What safe will protect me from 50 or 80 percent of burglaries and fires. This question is an example of protection based on real life occurrences from locksmiths and manufacturers. If a safe has a lifetime warranty then manufacturers are having to deal with this and they have data as well as locksmiths. Also questions about how much can i really put into a safe. I really enjoy your videos on build quality and what you cover. Excellent But when you talk about cement like material in some safes hindering attacks i want to know if it is significant. I might want ar 500 steel instead of cement like to actually be significant. Anyway that's the information I want in addition to the excellent coverage you provide.
Thank you! I'd look closely the the BFII series. In my opinion, it comes down to weight and steel thickness. The concrete type lining helps in that it would need to be chipped out before getting to the inner steel lining and it's all about time. More steel generally equals more time. Thin, single wall, gauge steel, safes can be breached in just a minute or two with a grinder. Another option but more expensive is the RF series as it's lined with actual concrete containing ceramic nuggets and steel fiber making it even harder to cut or grind through.
Greetings Aaron! thank you for another great video. you mentioned that they will be building some of the CE safes overseas, do you know what country? Israel hopefully 🙂
Good job guys. The amount of companies that can’t do installs like this because they don’t know how to remove hardware is staggering. The BFII seems like the perfect choice. Most safes that tall and wide are 1” to 1.5” deeper than the similar size BFII. Also, Slick Sticks are one of the best innovations ever for moving safes. Keep up the good work.
My father has an Amsec vault door. Just pure quality. Built to last and built well and strong. Out of the vault doors I’ve researched, I like theirs the best. Unless we are talking bank vault doors. Those are the things dreams are made of.